Keep a record of the board games you play and how you rate them. It's yours to keep, on your own account, on the open network, not locked inside someone else's database.
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rolld now knows about your rpg.actor characterI just shipped a small change I wanted to blog about, because it shows off why building this way matters imo.
There's a sibling app called rpg.actor. It's the RPG-character cousin of rolld: you keep your tabletop characters there, a little pixel sprite and a stat sheet per system, and just like rolld, those characters live as records on your own PDS.
So now, when you visit someone's rolld profile and they also keep a character on rpg.actor, you'll see a slim card under their profile header: their character's sprite, the systems they play (D&D, Cyberpunk 2020, whatever they've got going), and a link out to their rpg.actor profile.
Here's the part I like. rolld doesn't call rpg.actor's server to do any of this. It reads the records straight from the person's own PDS, actor.rpg.sprite for the sprite and actor.rpg.stats for the systems. It grabs what's public on your PDS and link out. If you're not on rpg.actor, the card simply doesn't appear.
Small caveat: rpg.actor's schemas aren't frozen, so I treat this quite defensively. If a field goes missing or a shape changes, the card should quietly render nothing rather than breaking your profile.
I'd love to do more of this. If you're building on ATproto and there's some overlap with rolld, let me know! :)
Jul 9, 2026rolld.at is live :)rolld is live :)
If you play board games and like the idea of keeping a log that's actually yours, rolld is now open at rolld.at.
rolld is a board game play-and-rate tracker built on the AT Protocol. You log the games you play, rate the ones you have opinions about, and look back on your table over time. The interesting bit is where it all lives: every play and every rating is a record on your own PDS, signed by you. rolld is just a lens on top of that. If it ever disappears, your history doesn't.
What you can do with it:
Log a play. Search the game, set the date, and add other details if you'd like: you can tag other players who played with you, add the scores, a winner, a photo of the board, and a note if you'd like.
Rate a game out of 10.
See what people you follow are playing, if they're on rolld too.
Look back at your history, your most-played games, your top-rated ones, your year at the table.
Share a play to Bluesky, if you want to.
It's a small, open source project. There are no ads or streaks or things like that. You'll just find a calm log of games you've enjoyed with people you like.
It also stands on a lot of other people's work: the microcosm.blue services (Constellation, Slingshot, Spacedust) do the social reads, and game data comes from BoardGameGeek. If you want the longer story of why I built it, I wrote it up on my blog: rolld: I put my board game logs on AT Protocol.
The code is open, dual-licensed MIT / Apache-2.0, over on Tangled at tangled.org/jeremy.herve.bzh/rolld.
Come log a play at rolld.at, and let me know what you've been playing. :)
Jul 8, 2026